Can I swap 225/55 R 17's for the current stock 225/65 R 17's on my new Outback?

20

Asked by Paul Dec 28, 2014 at 02:16 PM about the 2015 Subaru Outback 2.5i Premium

Question type: General

Hi! I just bought a new 2015 Outback that comes with 225/65 R 17 All Season Bridgestones.  I'm on a very steep hill so I would like to mount  a wheel/tire package that I used last winter on my Forester. The  winter tire package is 225/55 R 17's Hankook Winter I Pike tires that are amazing in winter on an AWD vehicle. I calculated I'd be losing .88 inches in height. The ground clearance on the Outback is 8.7 inches, so I'd be down to 7.82 inches which is still fine. Aside from losing the low air pressure indicator, and maybe not as accurate  readings for the speedometer/odometer, can any one think of why this couldn't or shouldn't be done ...or does it sound doable? Many thanks for your input...Wishing all a safe winter drive ( and if you live in an area that gets that funny white stuff, there is NOTHING GREATER IN LIFE  that having an ICE TIRE ON A SUBIE (  well maybe  almost nothing)...

4 Answers

1,645

As long as you change all 4 tires I dont see an issue with this. Yes what u mentioned is true. Its important to keep the same size tires on all 4

2 people found this helpful.
20

Many thanks heich25 & the best of everything to you & family in 2015! -paul

2 people found this helpful.
86,085

Sorry, I don't see why you're doing this. Your point is what? I thought that "all season tires " meant "all seasons "? Are you really going to get a small performance increase from this? Sorry, I live in Southern California, my condolences on your winter.

1 people found this helpful.
48,040

Dropping to 55 series sidewalls will result in a very significant in handling both because of the lower Cog AND the much stiffer sidewalls. I'd be sure to stay at 35F/33R psi. The body control will still be sloppy (like all 2010+ OB s and any Forester), but it WILL be better. Odo/Speedo errors will be maybe +10%, of course, but the CVT shouldn't mind. Maybe you've tried the down-sizing last winter? How'd it go? Note to others: the OE 18" wheels use a stiffer 60 series tire to maintain OE ride height yet supply a fair amount of improved handling. But 17" wheel owners have little choice. Using 225/0-17 tires would be an intermediate compromise too, but there's no question that the 55's will feel best. Think of it as being like the lower CoG Legacy Wagon (available outside North America) with its superior handling and body control. If I was forced to own a '10+ OB I'd try 225/55-17V-rated too. If I had a Limited with 18" I'd downsize to 225/55-18 to get improved handling and not such a loss of height, or even 225/50- 18 and try to attain the best handling inherent in the sloppy body underpinnings.

6 people found this helpful.

Your Answer:

Outback

Looking for a Used Outback in your area?

CarGurus has 1,120 nationwide Outback listings starting at $2,995.

Postal Code:

CarGurus Experts

  • #1
    Mark Weiner
    Reputation
    33,220
  • #2
    TheSubaruGuruBoston
    Reputation
    28,310
  • #3
    Keith Cahalan
    Reputation
    3,310
View All

Find great deals from top-rated dealers

Search

Related Models For Sale

Used Subaru Forester
32 Great Deals out of 1,355 listings starting at $3,995
Used Subaru Crosstrek
47 Great Deals out of 1,326 listings starting at $5,995
Used Toyota RAV4
120 Great Deals out of 3,047 listings starting at $4,999
Used Honda CR-V
170 Great Deals out of 4,990 listings starting at $440
Used Toyota 4Runner
26 Great Deals out of 540 listings starting at $7,700
Used Toyota Tacoma
46 Great Deals out of 728 listings starting at $8,995
Used Subaru Legacy
13 Great Deals out of 209 listings starting at $3,000
Used Subaru Impreza
26 Great Deals out of 661 listings starting at $4,299
Used Toyota Camry
48 Great Deals out of 1,142 listings starting at $4,795
Used Toyota Highlander
40 Great Deals out of 792 listings starting at $5,900
Used Honda Pilot
36 Great Deals out of 860 listings starting at $1,995
Used Mazda CX-5
73 Great Deals out of 3,208 listings starting at $6,990
Used Ford F-150
318 Great Deals out of 13,660 listings starting at $3,800
Used Jeep Wrangler
127 Great Deals out of 5,924 listings starting at $6,500

Content submitted by Users is not endorsed by CarGurus, does not express the opinions of CarGurus, and should not be considered reviewed, screened, or approved by CarGurus. Please refer to CarGurus Terms of Use. Content will be removed if CarGurus becomes aware that it violates our policies.